Monday, 10 April 2017

Commemorated
on the Ducrow Mausoleum, on the same panel as his father (and below the famous
epitaph ‘Erected by a genius for the reception of his own remains’, generally read
as a piece of self aggrandisement by the deceased showman himself but almost
certainly the words of his wife Louisa) is his youngest son. The full
inscription reads:

Also
of

Andrew
Ducrow

Ensign
40th Regiment

Youngest
son of the above

Who
died of wounds received whilst gallantly leading his men

In
the attack on Rangiriri New Zealand Nov 20th 1863

He
is mentioned in despatches as being

If
not the first certainly one of the first

To
enter the enemy entrenchments

He
died greatly beloved and deeply regretted by

His
brother officers and all who knew him

This
tablet is erected to commemorate his noble death

And
as a small tribute of a great love by his sorrowing parents

Peace
to the memory of the brave

Born
18th June 1843 died 23rd December 1863

Louisa
Ducrow gave birth to her youngest son on 18 June 1842, four months after the
death of her husband and named the baby after his recently deceased father,
Andrew Ducrow. She baptised him in November at St Johns in Waterloo. The baptismal
register gives no indication that Andrew Ducrow père was dead; in the Quality, Trade or Profession column he is
listed as an equestrian (an unsuitably vigorous trade for a corpse). Andrew
Ducrow fils did not however remain sans père for very long. With her
husband buried for little more than two years Louisa Ducrow married John Hay,
on 24 February 1844, and Andrew fils
and his three siblings acquired a stepfather. Some sources say John Hay was a
brewer, but it is far from certain that he had any money. When he moved his new
family from Lambeth to the more upmarket Albany Street, an extension of Great
Portland Street, on the Regents Park estate, he may well have been spending
what was left of Andrew Ducrow’s £60,000 fortune (in the 1851 census his occupation
was simply listed as Gentleman, a career involving little or no remuneration. A
decade later in the 1861 census he had become an hotelier). Certainly by 1847 John Hay was in dispute with
the executors of Ducrow’s will; he was no longer willing to spend at least some
of the money set aside in the will for the upkeep of the Mausoleum. Ducrow had
left £500 to meet his funeral costs, £800 “to be expended in or about the erecting or
enlarging, or adding to or altering the monument then erected over his vault and
for the purpose of placing inscriptions on the said monument,” and a further
£200 to be placed in trust in the 3% bank annuities, the dividends to be used
in “repairing, renewing, and decorating his said vault, monument, and obelisks
or columns, and the inscription thereon, and planting and keeping up, and
spreading such shrubs and flowers about or upon the same.” The £500 for the
funeral had presumably long been paid out but perhaps there was still something
left of the £800 and certainly the whole of the £200 to be invested in the 3
per cents. Louisa, or more likely John, were reluctant to tie up good money for
the purposes of providing flowers for Ducrow’s tomb and one of the other
executors, Oscar Byrne, felt obliged to take the matter to law. In June 1847
the case was brought before the Court of Chancery and brought to a swift
conclusion when the defendant’s counsel raised no objection to any of the
provisions of the will, effectively conceding the case.

Andrew Ducrow baptism record from St Johns, Waterloo

We
know nothing about Andrew Ducrow fils life
growing up in the household of John Hay at Albany Street. The marriage between
his mother and the gentleman hotelier was childless but all four of the Ducrow
offspring were still living at Albany Street according to the 1861 census. We know that Andrew fils was already in the army by the beginning of 1861 as according
to the London Gazette he was appointed ensign by purchase, taking the place of
former ensign Henry Swanson, in the regiment of the 40th Foot on the 15th
January. Shortly afterwards he travelled with his regiment to New Zealand where
he saw active service in the land wars, taking part in the invasion of Waikato
and losing his life at the key engagement of the campaign in Rangiriri, being shot
in the left knee on 20 November and dying two days before Christmas after
having his leg amputated.

DEATH OF ENSIGN
DUCROW - It is with great regret that we announce to our readers the death of
Ensign Ducrow at the Queen's Redoubt, at a quarter to eleven o'clock yesterday
morning. As our readers already know he was one of the brave fellows who were
wounded at Rangiriri, and whose wound was so severe that his leg had to be
amputated. It was at first thought that he would recover, but at last he sank
under it, and is now no more. His remains will be brought into town to-day, and
we presume they will be buried on Saturday. Ensign Andrew Ducrow entered the
service in the 40th Regt. on the 18th January, 1861, and shortly after embarked
from England for this colony. In May last he went to Taranaki, and returned
with the rest of the troops. This as might be expected from his youth and rank,
was the first active service he had seen, and unfortunately it is the last. He
was generally respected by his brother soldiers. His death increases the number
of officers lost to the British service, and their sorrowing relatives, by the
attack on Rangiriri, to no less than six.

Daily Southern
Cross, 24 December 1863

St Johns, Waterloo

FUNERAL OF ENSIGN
DUCROW - The remains of this unfortunate young officer, who was severely
wounded at Rangiriri, and whose death we reported a few days ago, were interred
yesterday in the Auckland cemetery. Although the rank of Ensign Ducrow did not
entitle him to the same honours at his funeral as would be paid to those in a
position above him, and whose services had made them more conspicuous for the
part they had taken in the war, yet we are quite sure the attendance upon his
obsequies was none the less sincere. It must, indeed, be a matter of regret
that this gallant young gentlemen should have fallen at so early an age, as he
was a promising officer; and might have achieved distinction for himself and
done the state good service. Like Lieutenant Colonel, Austen, Ensign Ducrow had,
through his relatives, just come into a very handsome income for his rank. From
the enjoyment of this, however, he has been debarred; but he leaves behind him
the name of being one of those who bravely fought for their country at
Rangiriri and suffered.

It was arranged
that the funeral procession should leave the Albert Barracks at half past 3
o'clock, and at that hour two or three hundred persons assembled there. This
weather, although threatening, kept fine, and all the preliminaries; having
been arranged, the procession started from the Albert Barracks about four
o'clock, the band, of the 50th Regiment preceding it, and playing the Dead
March. The following was the order of the procession:—

Firing party,
consisting of forty men from the several detachments in garrison, under the
command of Ensign Toseland. Band of 50th
Regt. The Coffin, drawn on a gun carriage, with six horses and drivers of the
Royal Artillery. Pall Bearers; Mr Jones, Royal Engineers Department; Staff
Assistant-Surgeon O'Connell; Ensign Green, 14th Regiment; Lieutenant Hobbs,
40th-Regiment; Chief Mourners. Lieutenant-Colonel Nelson, 40thRegiment;
Lieutenant Burton, 40th Regiment; Staff Assistant-Surgeon Dempster, Detachment
of troops in garrison, Officers of
Militia. Officers of the Regular Troops, 7 Officers of the Royal Navy,
including Lieutenant Downes and Lieutenant Hotham, both wounded at Rangirirj. Mr Whitaker, Premier. His Excellency the Governor,
and General Galloway. &c, &c, &c.

The road to the
burial ground was pretty thickly covered with spectators. On reaching the
cemetery the usual funeral service was read by the Rev. Kinder, garrison
chaplain, and three volleys having being fired over the grave the assemblage
dispersed. The remains of Ensign Duerow were laid beside the rest of the dead
heroes of Rangiriri, whose last resting place is now mournfully denoted by a
row of fresh mounds of earth, unornamented as yet by those tokens with which
the living seek to perpetuate the memory of the dead. The following was the inscription on the coffin:— ENSIGN ANDREW DTJCROW, 40th REGIMENT,
DIED OF WOUNDS RECEIVED IN ACTION. 20th November, 1863, AGED 21 YEARS.

Daily Southern
Cross, 24 December 1863

Most
of his money went back to his mother and John Hay but he bequeathed his gold
signet ring to his friend Lieutenant Burton who was still wearing it 33 years
later as a prized souvenir of his departed friend.